tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3240737.post249508213745116052..comments2023-10-02T23:19:20.226+10:00Comments on The long slow {typecast} blog: Dreams are bad. Projects better.rino breebaarthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08732964644950027323noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3240737.post-43866328231928453162009-12-12T19:07:44.234+10:002009-12-12T19:07:44.234+10:00True 'nuff. But I dislike the dreamers who onl...True 'nuff. But I dislike the dreamers who only dream and then deflate when the dream proves too idealised. Instead of the artists, directors, writers who always have a project on the go. And who don't sit around *dreaming* of being an artist. I love pondering and daydreaming, but when it comes to creation, we need to skim off that 5-10% or romantic hoo-ha and look at things pragmatically, as The Work etc.rino breebaarthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08732964644950027323noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3240737.post-51382593046811611982009-12-12T13:12:17.925+10:002009-12-12T13:12:17.925+10:00I'm torn on this one, Reens. While I am a big ...I'm torn on this one, Reens. While I am a big fan of projects and support your argument for them wholeheartedly, I can't fully reject dreams. I think retreating and playing in your imagination is a terrific and necessary past-time. Particularly given the universally dire state of television :)<br /><br />True, a dream can't happen until it becomes a project but a project originates from somewhere right? I think the real issue is self-awareness. A knowing balance between play and pragmatism, that's the key.Katiehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03973005261421274957noreply@blogger.com